Research on Cascading Natural Disaster Hazards Helps Communities Plan Ahead for Weather Threats
As extreme weather increases in frequency and damages done, so does a phenomenon known as "cascading hazards."
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As extreme weather increases in frequency and damages done, so does a phenomenon known as "cascading hazards."
Dana Orange's research may help predict flares, provide precise drug targets, and enable interventions that block symptoms before they begin.
A remotely operated robot explored Lake Tahoe's depths, revealing insights into the lake's history and debunking myths during a livestream.
The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center and Phoenix SENOLYTIX, Inc., today announced a global cross-licensing agreement to facilitate work that will further enhance the development of inducible switch technologies for use in cell and gene therapies.
A University of Nebraska-Lincoln researcher is using National Science Foundation funding to tackle spectrum scarcity, an increasingly urgent problem as wireless traffic soars to new heights.
*Clinical trials show promising results in treating pancreatic and colorectal cancers*New treatment strategies improve outcomes for patients with kidney and testicular cancers*Novel research techniques enable advances in gene-drug interactions, breast cancer progression, and identifying pre-cancerous lesions*Biomarkers help predict risk for oral cancer metastasis
Researchers Einar Gabbassov and Achim Kempf have established a relationship between the complexity of a problem, and the physical processes of entanglement required to solve it.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Over a recent two-year period, the Pentagon funded hundreds of projects done in collaboration with universities in China and institutes linked to that nation’s defense industry, including many blacklisted by the U.S. government for working with the...
The telecommunications industry is one of the most dramatically transformed industries in contemporary history,The post Beyond the signal: How embedded systems are shaping the future of global connectivity appeared first on Digital Journal.
How an unsuspecting macronutrient entered the pop-science spotlight.
Our present financial world handles billions of transactions every year, where they struggle to test their systems quickly and reliablyThe post Remodeling quality assurance with Test Environment as a Product appeared first on Digital Journal.
One scientist says it's like buying a car and running it into a tree to save on gas money.
While artificial intelligence might make the student research paper obsolete, if today a student does his or her own research and writing, it’s quite possible... Read MoreThe post Biased Wikipedia Hurls Brickbats at Fox and Newsmax, Bouquets at CNN and MSNBC appeared first on The Daily Signal.
KENNEWICK — Pacific Northwest National Laboratory didn’t need to go too far to snag its next director.
Police in Portugal said Friday that 11 of the 16 people killed when a Lisbon streetcar derailed were foreigners. The dead included five Portuguese nationals, three British citizens, two Canadians, two South Koreans, one American, one French, one Swiss, and one Ukrainian, police said in a statement, the AP reports....
<img src="https://www.newswise.com/legacy/image.php?image=https://tupa-q-001.sitecorecontenthub.cloud/api/public/content/bd24f62f68734337adf6987b6d37b3be?v=b9070341=3x4width=100height=150" alt="Newswise image" /More than 23.5 million Americans are impacted by autoimmune diseases, such as celiac disease, type 1 diabetes, multiple sclerosis, and rheumatoid arthritis. These conditions--in which the body's immune system attacks healthy cells--are a leading cause of death and disability, with annual health care costs exceeding $100 billion. Today, a new home opens as an epicenter for pioneering Penn research aimed at breaking the immunological code of these diseases and bringing them to heel. Leaders and faculty from the University of Pennsylvania officially marked the new era by cutting the ceremonial ribbon in the reimagined space at 3600 Civic Center Boulevard.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Over a recent two-year period, the Pentagon funded hundreds of projects done in collaboration with universities in China and institutes linked to that nation's defense industry, including many blacklisted by the U.S.
Chemical & Engineering News (C&EN): Keeping you up to date with the chemistry news that matters most. Published by the American Chemical Society.
Museum scientist Gary Graves has spent decades investigating why red-billed and black-billed streamertail hummingbirds remain distinct species despite on-going hybridization
Researchers hope the technique could offer a more environmentally friendly approach to cleaning up messy clothing.
Chemical & Engineering News (C&EN): Keeping you up to date with the chemistry news that matters most. Published by the American Chemical Society.
he Faculty of Fine and Applied Arts, in collaboration with the Metallurgy and Materials Science Research Institute and the Faculty of Science, Chulalongkorn University, invites you to join the academic seminar "Living Metal Sound: Reviving the Gong of the Past, Sustaining It into the Future," on Wednesday, September 10, 2025, from 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. at the CU Music Hall, Arts and Culture Building, Chulalongkorn University.
Dear Colleagues, The Attachment functions in the Kuali Research Modules as well as the ATS will be unavailable (view, upload or download functions) this evening, Friday (9/5) from 8pm-8:30pm. Other Kuali Research functions will be ...
Essential Variables Overview: Understanding Key Metrics in Data Analysis In today’s data-driven world, making informed decisions hinges on the ability to analyze and interpret various data points. Among these data points, essential variables play a critical role in understanding trends, patterns, and outcomes. This article explores what essential variables are, why they matter, and how [...]
"Earth's Seasons Are No Longer In Sync": Scientists Use Satellite Data To Reveal Chaotic Growth Patterns That Challenge 20 Years Of Ecological Models Energy ReportersNew Map Shows Satellite View of How Seasons Change Explorersweb »Seasonal timing can change quickly over short distances Earth.comEarth’s Seasons Are Out of Sync and Satellites Have Spotted It Orbital TodayToday In 'At This Point, Sure' – Turns Out Earth's Seasons Are Out Of Sync Yahoo News Canada
Hydrogen is the most abundant element in the solar system. As a source of clean energy, hydrogen is well-suited for sustainable development, and Earth is a natural hydrogen factory. However, most hydrogen vents reported to date are small, and the geological processes responsible for hydrogen formation—as well as the quantities that can be preserved in geological settings—remain unclear.
Chemists at the University of Copenhagen have developed a method to convert plastic waste into a climate solution for efficient and sustainable CO2 capture. This is killing two birds with one stone as they address two of the world's biggest challenges: plastic pollution and the climate crisis.
A study by UdeM's animal pharmacology research group reveals that surgically removing a cat's claws is not only painful, it has irreversible long-term effects.
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory didn’t need to go too far to snag its next director. The national lab that oversees $1.6 billion in research and employs more than 6,000 in the Tri-Cities announced Thursday that Deborah Gracio was chosen following a competitive nationwide search. The 35-year PNNL veteran is an associate lab director who oversees PNNL’s diverse national security research ...
This dramatic scene captured by NASA's James Webb Space Telescope looks like a fantastical tableau from J. R. R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings. But truth is even stranger than fiction. In reality, what appears to be a craggy, starlit mountaintop kissed by wispy clouds is actually a cosmic dust-scape being sculpted by the scorching radiation and punishing winds of massive newborn stars.Called Pismis 24, this young star cluster is home to a vibrant stellar nursery. Super-hot, infant stars - some almost 8 times the temperature of the Sun - are carving a cavity into the wall of the star-forming nebula. Dramatic spires jut from the glowing wall of gas, resisting the relentless radiation and winds. They are like fingers pointing toward the hot, young stars that have sculpted them. The fierce forces shaping and compressing these spires cause new stars to form within them.One of the closest sites of massive star birth, Pismis 24 resides in the core of the nearby Lobster Nebula, appro
Multimillion DARPA grant funds research into autonomous soaring
President Donald Trump hosted a high-powered group of tech executives at the White House on Thursday as he showcased research on artificial intelligence and boasted of investments that companies are making around the United States.“This is taking our country to a new level,” he said at the center of a long table surrounded by what he described as “high IQ people.”It was the latest example of a delicate two-way courtship between Trump and tech leaders, several of whom attended his inauguration. Trump has exulted in the attention from some of the world’s most successful businesspeople, while the companies are eager to remain on the good side of the mercurial president. While the executives praised Trump and talked about their hopes for technological advancement, the Republican president was focused on dollar signs. He went around the table and asked executives how much they were investing in the country.Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg, who sat to Trump’s right, said $600 billion. Apple’s Tim Cook said the same. Google’s Sundar Pichai said $250 billion. Elon MuskAug 25Elon Musk accuses Apple, OpenAI of stifling AI competition in antitrust lawsuitnewsJul 24Trump says he won't ‘destroy' Musk's companies by taking away subsidies“What about Microsoft?” Trump said. “That’s a big number.”CEO Satya Nadella said it was up to $80 billion per year. “Good,” Trump responded. “Very good.”Notably absent from the guest list was Elon Musk, once a close ally of Trump who was tasked with running the Department of Government Efficiency. Musk had a public breakup with Trump earlier this year. At the table instead was one of Musk’s rivals in artificial intelligence, Sam Altman of OpenAI. In another reflection of shifting loyalties in Trump’s world, the dinner included Jared Isaacman, who founded the payment processing company Shift4. Isaacman was a Musk ally chosen by Trump to lead NASA, only to have his nomination withdrawn because he was, in Trump’s words, “totally a Democrat.”The dinner was expected to be held in the Rose Garden, where Trump recently paved over the grassy lawn and set up tables, chairs and umbrellas that look strikingly similar to the outdoor setup at his Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida. But because of inclement weather, officials decided to move the event to the White House State Dining Room.The event followed an afternoon meeting of the White House’s new Artificial Intelligence Education task force, which first lady Melania Trump chaired and some tech leaders participated in.“The robots are here. Our future is no longer science fiction,” she said,Pichai, IBM chairman and CEO Arvind Krishna and Code.org President Cameron Wilson were among those participating in the task force. The White House confirmed that the guest list for the dinner also included: Microsoft cofounder Bill Gates; Google founder Sergey Brin; OpenAI founder Greg Brockman; Oracle CEO Safra Catz; Blue Origin CEO David Limp; Micron CEO Sanjay Mehrotra; TIBCO Software chairman Vivek Ranadive; Palantir executive Shyam Sankar; Scale AI founder Alexandr Wang; and Shift4 Payments CEO Jared Isaacman. Trump’s outreach to top tech executives has occasionally been divisive within the Republican Party.One of Trump’s closest allies in Congress, Sen. Josh Hawley, delivered a sharp criticism of the tech industry during a speech at a conservative conference in Washington on Thursday morning. He criticized the lack of regulation around artificial intelligence and singled out Meta and ChatGPT. “The government should inspect all of these frontier AI systems so we can better understand what the tech titans plan to build and destroy,” the Missouri senator said.Trump has embraced AI-created imagery and frequently shares it online, despite his complaints earlier in the week about the technology being used to create misleading videos. Late Wednesday night, he posted a string of AI-generated memes and videos, such as one depicting him interacting with the man pictured in the Cracker Barrel logo, one showing California Democratic Sen. Adam Schiff with an extremely elongated neck, and one with Trump’s face superimposed on a pole vaulter as it appears to leap over a Cracker Barrel banner.On Tuesday, Trump said a video showing items being thrown out of an upstairs window of the White House must have been created by AI, despite his team seeming to have confirmed the video’s veracity hours earlier. Trump then said, “If something happens that’s really bad, maybe I’ll have to just blame AI.”The first lady, at her event Thursday, likewise highlighted both the potential and peril of AI. “As leaders and parents, we must manage AI’s growth responsibly,” she said, calling for both action and caution. “During this primitive stage, it is our duty to treat AI as we would our own children — empowering, but with watchful guidance.”Last month, the first lady launched a nationwide contest for students in grades K-12 to use AI to complete a project or address a community challenge. The project was aimed at showing the benefits of AI, but the first lady has also highlighted its drawbacks.Melania Trump lobbied Congress this year to pass legislation that imposes penalties for online sexual exploitation using imagery that is real or an AI-generated deepfake.The president signed the “Take It Down Act” in May.
Jupiter hosts the brightest and most spectacular auroras in the Solar System, and its largest moons (the Galileans) create their own auroral signatures known as “satellite footprints” in the planet’s atmosphere. Until now, astronomers had detected the auroral signatures of three Galileans (Io, Europa, and Ganymede), but not Callisto. Thanks to an international team, close-up images of Callisto's footprints have been seen at last.
Jupiter hosts the brightest and most spectacular auroras in the Solar System, and its largest moons (the Galileans) create their own auroral signatures known as “satellite footprints” in the planet’s atmosphere. Until now, astronomers had detected the auroral signatures of three Galileans (Io, Europa, and Ganymede), but not Callisto. Thanks to an international team, close-up images of Callisto's footprints have been seen at last.
Mostly clear skies in Okanagan, Kamloops for full Corn Moon viewing Infotel.caWhat to know about the ‘blood moon’ total eclipse—one of the longest in decades National Geographic
Biotech company Amgen is investing $600 million into a new research center for its Thousand Oaks, California, campus.
Telescope reveals a growing tail on the comet that’s visiting from another star CTV NewsView Full Coverage on Google News
A research team has isolated the anthracnose pathogen infecting greater yam and identified it as Colletotrichum alatae--the first report of this species in yam.
Telescope reveals a growing tail on the comet that’s visiting from another star AP NewsThe interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS is wrapped in carbon dioxide fog, NASA space telescope reveals SpaceThe Racing Speed of 3I/ATLAS Avi Loeb – Medium3I/ATLAS's Coma Is Largely Carbon Dioxide Universe TodayInterstellar comet 3I/ATLAS tail changing as it zooms through solar system FOX Weather
University Health Network announces successful surgeries in trial, allowing patients with spinal injuries to control computers with their thoughts.
A research team identified nearly 7,000 phosphorylation sites in close to 2,800 proteins and revealed distinct regulatory patterns tied to growth or dormancy.
The University of Northern Iowa is leading a study into materials that could be applied to quantum technologies as part of a more than $1 million grant with partner universities.
A research team presents the transcriptomic analysis of pearl millet, a highly resilient cereal, revealing how this crop adapts to high temperature, drought, and salt stress.
3D-printed organoid scaffolds helped rats regain movement after complete spinal cord injury, a breakthrough led by University of Minnesota.
Many students were cautiously hopeful after a judge said the Trump administration could not freeze research funding to the university. But they also had other things on their minds.
In a significant advancement for laboratory operations, a pioneering biotech firm has introduced a range of innovative lab automation solutions designed specifically for drug development. This new technology aims to enhance efficiency, reduce human error, and accelerate the overall drug discovery process.The newly launched automation systems integrate state-of-the-art robotics and artificial intelligence to optimize various aspects of drug development, from high-throughput screening to
For over a hundred years, schoolchildren around the world have learned that ice melts when pressure and friction are applied. When you step out onto an icy pavement in winter, you can slip up because of the pressure exerted by your body weight through the sole of your (still warm) shoe. But it turns out that this explanation misses the mark.
The National Security Engineering Center, a MITRE-operated federally funded research and development center, has unveiled a defense acquisition framework to accelerate the development and deployment of innovative technologies to U.S. warfighters. NSEC’s Transition Maturity Framework MITRE said Wednesday NSEC collaborated with the Department of Defense’s Operational Energy-Innovation Directorate, or OE-I, to develop the Transition Maturity [...]
The PET (polyethylene terephthalate)-alternative PDCA (pyridinedicarboxylic acid) is biodegradable and has superior physical properties, according to a recent study. A Kobe University team of bioengineers engineered E. coli bacteria to produce the compound from glucose at unprecedented levels and without byproducts—and opened up a realm of possibilities for the future of bioengineering. The findings are published in the journal Metabolic Engineering.
Input and expertise from radiologists can help develop better and more trustworthy artificial intelligence (AI) tools, new research shows. The study used radiologists' eye movements to help guide AI systems to focus on the most clinically relevant areas of medical images.
Switzerland has set itself the goal of reducing its CO2 emissions to net-zero by 2050. The final report of the POLIZERO research project—led by the Paul Scherrer Institute PSI and the University of Piraeus—shows which policy measures are best suited to this goal. The conclusion: The net-zero target is achievable—if decisive action is taken now.
Moon phase today explained: What the moon will look like on September 4, 2025 MashableMoon phase today: What the moon will look like on September 3, 2025 MashablePhases of the moon, facts and information yahoo.com
Researchers at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Maryland, are exploring a new approach to producing food on demand with unconventional materials. Through the Feedstocks for Food Production (FFP) project, APL is investigating ways to grow edible microbial food by harnessing nonpotable water.
Adding an electrical jolt to fermentation of industrial food waste speeds up the process and increases the yield of platform chemicals that are valuable components in a wide range of products, new research shows.
Joyce Y. Lee, assistant professor in the College of Social Work (CSW) at The Ohio State University, and two other faculty members from the college, Sharvari Karandikar, professor and associate dean of academic affairs, and Sehun Oh, associate professor, spent two days with administrators, staff, faculty and students at Inje University in Gimhae, South Korea, earlier this summer.
If biomolecules were people, heparin would be a celebrity. Best known as a powerful blood thinner with a global market of more than $7 billion, heparin is used during and after surgery and is essential to kidney dialysis. Most of today's heparin comes from pigs, but the Food and Drug Administration is encouraging the use of alternative sources, including cows and synthetic forms of heparin, to diversify the supply chain.
Ireland's first satellite, EIRSAT-1, has completed its mission orbiting Earth. The CubeSat, which was built and launched by students and faculty of University College Dublin (UCD), will de-orbit in a day or two.
What can you see tonight?As we approach the Full Moon, each night the moon will appear bigger and brighter, but after the Full Moon passes, it will slowly get darker and darker until there's nothing to see. This is to do with the lunar cycle.The lunar cycle is a series of eight unique phases ...
One of the ways that per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) earn their "forever chemical" nickname and persist in the environment is their acidity.
The United States is at risk of falling behind its communist rivals otherwise, they say.
A new study out of the U.K. lays out how thumbs helped shape brain development in humans and other primates. Scientists found a link between thumb size and the size of the neocortex which is involved in higher-order brain functions, which they say suggests that thumbs are linked to "thinking and not movement."
SpaceX has to hit these key milestones to ready Starship for prime time Digital TrendsSpaceX: Starship V3 Landing At Starbase On Flight 13-15 DataconomySpaceX completes successful test flight of world’s most powerful rocket MSNElon Musk reveals when SpaceX will perform first-ever Starship catch TeslaratiStarship’s heat shield appears to have performed quite well in test Ars Technica
The Basic to Breakthrough series chronicles how investments at the Department of Energy's (DOE) National Laboratories have established the foundation for new technologies that are changing our world.
Technology developed at Case Western Reserve University can restore a sense of touch that makes a prosthetic hand feel like a part of one's own body instead of feeling artificial and disconnected.
Flexible Generalization: A Balancing Act between Specificity and Adaptability In a rapidly evolving world characterized by complex systems and diverse data sources, the concept of flexible generalization has emerged as a vital principle in various fields, including artificial intelligence, machine learning, education, and even business strategy. It refers to the ability to generate broad conclusions [...]
Dear Colleagues, We are excited for our ZOT hSCRO launch in just a little over a week, on Monday, September 15! Important Timeline: Please be advised that to accommodate our hSCRO data migration, the cutoff to process t...
Despite some challenges, cotton production is expected to be better than average due to timely rains this season, according to Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service reports around the state.
An expert from the University of Arizona is excited about the potential for life on a possible new planet. The planet is not considered to be far away in astronomical terms. FOX 10's Brian Webb spoke with the professor to learn more.
Researchers have demonstrated a new fabrication approach that enables the exploration of a broader range of superconducting materials for quantum hardware. The study promises to solve the problem of many promising superconductors being difficult to pattern into functional devices using conventional chemistry-based methods.
The sPHENIX detector at Brookhaven passes its first big test, proving ready to study quark-gluon plasma born just after the Big Bang.
Advanced Pharmaceutical Manufacturing (APM), an emerging leader in drug production technologies, has announced the establishment of a new state-of-the-art manufacturing facility in Singapore. This cutting-edge facility is set to transform the local pharmaceutical landscape by significantly increasing production capacity and improving operational efficiencies.The decision to expand operations comes on the heels of rising demand for both generic and specialty pharmaceuticals in the Asia-
4 September 2025 - Danish medical software company Brain+ A/S (Nasdaq First North:BRAINP) on Thursday reported strong results from a post market clinical follow-up study of its Ayla dementia care plat...
In a significant move to bolster its research and development (R&D) capabilities, a leading pharmaceutical company has announced the opening of a state-of-the-art analytical laboratory in Singapore. This facility is expected to play a crucial role in the company’s innovation cycle, allowing for more advanced testing and analysis of new drug formulations. The new laboratory is equipped with the latest analytical instruments and technologies, allowing scientists and researchers to cond
An Argentine federal court announced Wednesday that authorities had recovered the long-lost "Portrait of a Lady," an 18th-century work by the Italian painter Giuseppe Ghislandi that was looted by the Nazis in World War II, the AP reports. Before the presentation of the giant gold-framed portrait Wednesday in the Argentine...
Authorities say a researcher from Italy is missing after falling into a stream on Alaska’s Mendenhall Glacier. This comes after the body of another man, a hiker from Arizona, was found off a trail near the glacier on Monday. According...
Scientists chart new brain map revealing decision-making patterns Interesting EngineeringA brain-wide map of neural activity during complex behaviour NatureFirst map of mammal brain activity may have shown intuition in action New ScientistComplete brain activity map revealed for the first time EurekAlert!Brain-wide representations of prior information in mouse decision-making Nature
TOKYO, Sept. 3, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Eisai Co., Ltd. (Headquarters: Tokyo, CEO: Haruo Naito, "Eisai") announced today that the company will deliver a total of 11 presentations, including clinical data on the selective orexin 2 receptor agonist (OX2R) E2086 and...
The research could help develop new ways to treat such conditions as blindness and paralysis.
McGill University researchers have developed a novel method to replicate four types of microplastics commonly found in the environment, providing researchers with a standardized approach to study their toxic effects.
OncLive serves as the connection to oncology, including groundbreaking cancer news and interviews with top oncologists in multimedia formats.
The observations could reshape how we understand the Sun’s magnetic architecture and improve space weather forecasting.
World’s largest solar telescope captures clearest view of solar flare ttownmedia.comNew telescope images deliver sharpest-ever view of powerful solar flare MashableStunning new solar flare images show unprecedented detail EarthSkyWorld's Most Powerful Solar Telescope Captures Its First Monster Flare in Astonishing Detail ScienceAlertWorld's most powerful solar telescope sees incredible coronal loops on the sun (image) Space
SAUDI ARABIA, Riyadh, Sept. 03, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- King Faisal Specialist Hospital & Research Centre (KFSHRC) has reaffirmed its global standing as a pioneer in advanced medical technologies by successfully establishing in-house manufacturing and clinical application of CAR-T therapy,...
A recent study reveals how a major global climate pattern influences the African weather systems that help seed Atlantic hurricanes. The findings, published in the Journal of Climate, could lead to better seasonal forecasts of rainfall, drought, and tropical cyclone activity across the Atlantic basin.
Polyamines, a group of naturally occurring molecules found in all living organisms, are essential for fundamental cellular processes, such as growth and differentiation. In recent years, these compounds (particularly spermidine) have gained attention as promising "geroprotectors" that promote healthy aging and extend lifespan.
A collaborative research team led by Lu Fei from the Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology (IGDB) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) and Guo Zifeng from the Institute of Botany of CAS, together with their colleagues, has pinpointed key genetic factors shaping wheat spike morphology—a critical trait for yield—using a high-throughput phenotyping platform.
AgriScout is a first of its kind robot which identifies potato virus in the field with more than 90 per cent accuracy. It has been upgraded from last year and it is close to being commercial.
The world’s largest iceberg is “rapidly breaking up” into several large “very large chunks,” scientists from the British Antarctic Survey (BAS) have said.
Evidence derived from cutting-edge DNA technology that prosecutors say points directly at Rex Heuermann being the Gilgo Beach serial killer will be...
A Georgia dentist is believed to have killed his wife and their teenage daughter in their Georgia home before taking his own life, authorities say. The bodies of James Choi and Young Choi, both 52, and 15-year old Grace Choi were found Sunday during a welfare check at their home...
Why Do We Need Sleep? Oxford Scientists Trace the Answer to Mitochondria SciTechDaily
Pia26588 Nasas Planetary Radar Reveals Peanut Shape Of Asteroid 1997 Qk1 NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) (.gov)
ESA’s Solar Orbiter Snaps Powerful Coronal Mass Ejection DIY PhotographyDouble trouble: Solar Orbiter traces superfast electrons back to Sun European Space AgencyScientists discover explosive origins of superspeed electrons streaming from the sun SpaceScientists pinpoint how the Sun unleashes electron storms Earth.com
While the term "wildland-urban interface" may be unfamiliar, chances are you're among more than 8 million Texans living in it -- the rapidly expanding intersection of undeveloped native landscapes and urban/suburban sprawl.
Founded in 1940 and published by the Rutgers Center of Alcohol and Substance Use Studies, the Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs is a leading nonprofit voice in understanding addiction
Images taken with the MIRI infrared camera on the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) have made it possible to observe the first galaxies in long-wavelength infrared light for the first time. Alongside a recent study published in Astronomy and Astrophysics, these images provide new insights into how the first galaxies formed over 13 billion years ago.
Red Galaxies Provide New Insights into the Birth of the Universe Universe TodayA sharper image of the early universe: Program brings greater understanding to star and galaxy formation Phys.orgNASA’s Webb Telescope just found 300 galaxies that defy explanation ScienceDailyMystery Objects in the Distant Universe Challenge Galaxy Formation Ideas Universe TodayNASA’s Webb Delivers Deepest Infrared Image of Universe Yet NASA Science (.gov)
Juno Detected the Final Missing Auroral Signature from Jupiter’s Four Largest Moons NASA Science (.gov)In situ and remote observations of the ultraviolet footprint of the moon Callisto by the Juno spacecraft Nature
Jupiter hosts the brightest and most spectacular auroras in the Solar System. Near its poles, these shimmering lights offer a glimpse into how the planet interacts with the solar wind and moons swept by Jupiter’s magnetic field. Unlike Earth’s northern lights, the largest moons of Jupiter create their own auroral signatures in the planet’s atmosphere [...]
Officials issue warning after researchers spot parasitic insect in tree where it doesn't belong: 'Can parasitize multiple ... species' yahoo.comTwo Rare Parasitic Wasp Species Likely Hitchhiked On a Plane to Get to the U.S. Discover MagazineScientists discover rare wasp species in the U.S. for the first time EurekAlert!Invasive parasitic wasps quietly crossed oceans, now thriving in U.S. oak trees Earth.com